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Kobalt

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DeZwarteRidder
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quote:

hosternokke schreef op 8 oktober 2017 17:01:

Electric cars prompt consultants CRU to explore cobalt sulphate index
www.reuters.com/article/us-cobalt-pri...
Any cobalt sulphate prices published by CRU would be based on traded prices in China, a cobalt industry source said. Chinese firms dominate the production of cobalt sulphate.

“Basing it on traded rather than quoted prices makes it difficult... The market needs some mechanism for pricing cobalt chemicals, at the moment contracts are based on metal prices,” the cobalt industry source said. “A lot depends on how liquid the market for cobalt sulphate is.”

Most cobalt sulphate is made from cobalt hydroxide, which is dissolved in acid and purified, though it can also be made from cobalt metal using a similar process.

The Democratic Republic of Congo accounts for more than 60 percent of global cobalt supplies. Most of the cobalt from the DRC comes in the form of hydroxide, a byproduct of copper production. Cobalt is also a byproduct of nickel output.

CRU consultant George Heppel expects global demand for cobalt metal at nearly 136,000 tonnes in 2021 and more than 161,000 tonnes in 2025 from roughly 102,000 tonnes this year.

Demand for batteries used in electric vehicles and mobile appliances is expected to account for 46 percent of that in 2021 from about 40 percent this year.

“Alongside this large increase in demand, CRU also expects changes to the way refined cobalt is traded and produced,” Heppel said in a research note.

“This is primarily due to a shift in cobalt demand from metallic products to chemical products.”

Cobalt is also a component of the superalloys used to make jet engines and in chemicals such as those used to stick rubber tires to the steel core.

Reporting by Pratima Desai; editing by John Stonestreet
voda
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LME poised to join electric car revolution with cobalt sulphate contract
Published on Thu, 12 Oct 2017

Reuters reported thT The London Metal Exchange’s new cobalt contract is likely to be for a chemical compound vital for the manufacture of the batteries used in the fast-growing electric vehicle sector. LME CEO Mr Matt Chamberlain told Reuters “There is room in the market for two parallel contracts. One for cobalt metal and the second a chemical, so probably cobalt sulphate,” Chamberlain told the Reuters Global Commodities Summit, adding the exchange was talking to battery and electric vehicle makers. They’ve approached us because the industry needs some coordination in terms of how benchmarks are going to emerge. You don’t want to embed benchmarks that are not going to be hedgeable or tradeable in the future.”

Demand for that chemical cobalt sulphate is expected to soar over coming years as governments around the world set targets and timelines for electric vehicle sales in a bid to cut noxious emissions from fossil-fueled cars. The exchange is planning to launch a suite of contracts including cash-settled cobalt sulphate, lithium, hot rolled coil steel, alumina and aluminum contracts in one go in 18 months to two years.

The cobalt contract CBD0 currently traded on the exchange is for physically settled refined metal, often used in superalloys that go into jet engines, launched in 2010.

Source : Reuters
DeZwarteRidder
0
Australian Mines Limited (ASX:AUZ) is acquiring full ownership of the Sconi cobalt-nickel-scandium project in Queensland by signing an agreement with JV partner Metallica Minerals (ASX:MLM).

The Sconi project is rated one of the most advanced projects of its kind in Australia, with mining approvals in place and a bankable feasibility study (BFS) well advanced.

The Sconi Project is similar to Clean TeQ’s (ASX:CLQ) Syerston project in terms of its in-situ resource size & grade, geology, metallurgy and expected metal recoveries.

As at Syerston, scandium production at Sconi is a ‘sweetener’, given that it is produced alongside the cobalt and nickel sulphate products for virtually no additional operating cost.

The consideration for the acquisition is to include $3.5 million in cash and the issue of Australian Mines shares on completion of the BFS and commercial production.

Australian Mines is now positioned to fully own both the Sconi and the Flemington cobalt-nickel-scandium projects.

Having full control of both the projects puts Australian Mines in a good position to continue its already advanced off-take discussions with international battery and vehicle manufacturers.

To shore up the initial interest from end customers, the company has commenced construction of a demonstration-size processing plant to produce samples of cobalt, nickel and scandium products.

Importantly, the company recently raised $3.5 million via a placement at $0.015 per share to assist in the initial cash payment for the Sconi acquisition.

The BFS on Sconi is advancing to schedule and is due for completion by April 2018.

Australian Mines is on track to reach a final investment decision given that it already has a Mining Lease and environmental approvals in place.
[verwijderd]
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VW vist achter het net:

VW lowballs cobalt producers, fails to secure supply for EVs
German carmaker agreed in July to buy cobalt mined by Glencore from Chinese battery maker

In one of the clearest signs of a tight cobalt market, Volkswagen has failed to secure a long-term supply of cobalt used in electrical vehicle batteries.

The German carmaker last month put out a tender seeking a five-year supply of the strategic metal at a fixed price. But people familiar with the deal said the offer was well below market prices. Cobalt has more than doubled in price from a year ago, when it was trading around $12 a pound, to its current $27.10 a pound as of last Thursday. (see chart below).

"They're being arrogant because they're automotive and they're used to doing it," said a cobalt trader quoted Sunday in the Financial Times. "They completely misjudged the contents of the tender. There's no point negotiating – it's not even a discussion point."

Over 60 percent of cobalt is mined in the Democratic Republic of the Congo – raising concerns about stability of supply. The big producers are Glencore (LON:GLEN) and China Molybdenum, along with thousands of artisinal miners who mine the metal and send it to China. Amnesty International has said the process involves child labour.

According to the FT, the VW tender requires the supply of 80,000 to 130,000 tonnes of cobalt, in a market whose total supply is just over 100,000 tonnes a year.

In July of this year Glencore signed a deal to sell up to 20,000 tonnes of cobalt to Chinese battery maker Contemporary Amperex Technology Co Ltd. (CATL). VW would buy the batteries from CATL, in an effort to lock in supply of the metal used in lithium-ion EV batteries. The same month Chinese-owned Volvo said all its car models launched after 2019 would be electric or hybrid. Tesla and BMW are also said to be looking for cobalt supplies, though no tenders have been issued, the FT said.

www.mining.com/vw-lowballs-cobalt-pro...
DeZwarteRidder
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quote:

hosternokke schreef op 16 oktober 2017 15:58:

Golf diesel kopen? :)
Met deurknoppen van kobalt....!!
DeZwarteRidder
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Metal supplies unlikely to seriously hamper battery use
Published on Mon, 16 Oct 2017

Gears Of Biz reported that the dramatic rise in production of electric vehicles, coupled with expected growth in the use of grid-connected battery systems for storing electricity from renewable sources, raises a crucial question: Are there enough raw materials to enable significantly increased production of lithium-ion batteries, which are the dominant type of rechargeable batteries on the market?

A new analysis by researchers at MIT and elsewhere indicates that for the near future, there will be no absolute limitations on battery manufacturing due to shortages of the critical metals they require. But, without proper planning, there could be short-term bottlenecks in the supplies of some metals, particularly lithium and cobalt, that could cause temporary slowdowns in production.

The analysis, by professor Elsa Olivetti and doctoral student Xinkai Fu in MIT’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Gerbrand Ceder at the University of California at Berkeley, and Gabrielle Gaustad at the Rochester Institute of Technology, appears today in the journal Joule.

Olivetti, who is the Atlantic Richfield Assistant Professor of Energy Studies, says the new journal’s editors asked her to look at possible resource limitations as battery production escalates globally. To do that, Olivetti and her co-authors concentrated on five of the most essential ingredients needed to produce today’s lithium-ion batteries: lithium, cobalt, manganese, nickel, and carbon in the form of graphite. Other key ingredients, such as copper, aluminum, and some polymers used as membranes, are considered abundant enough that they are not likely to be a limiting factor.

Among those five materials, it was quickly clear that nickel and manganese are used much more widely in other industries; battery production, even if significantly increased, is “not a significant part of the pie,” Olivetti says, so nickel and manganese supplies are not likely to be impacted. Ultimately, the most significant materials whose supply chains could become limited are lithium and cobalt, she says.

For those two elements, the team looked at the diversity of the supply options in terms of geographical distribution, production facilities, and other variables. For lithium, there are two main pathways to production: mining and processing of brines. Of those, production from brine can be ramped up to meet demand much more rapidly, within as little as six or eight months, compared to bringing a new underground mine into production, Olivetti says. Although there might still be disruptions in the supply of lithium, she says, these are unlikely to seriously disrupt battery production.

Cobalt is a bit more complex. Its major source is the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which has a history of violent conflict and corruption. Ms Olivetti said that “That’s been a challenge.” She added that “Often a mine’s revenue comes from nickel, and cobalt is a secondary product.”

But the main potential cause of delays in obtaining new supplies of the mineral comes from not its inherent geographic distribution, but the actual extraction infrastructure. She said that “The delay is in the ability to open new mines. With any of these things, the material is out there, but the question is at what price.”

She said that to guard against possible disruptions in the cobalt supply, she added that researchers “are trying to move to cathode materials [for lithium-ion batteries]that are less cobalt-dependent.”

The study looked out over the next 15 years, and within that time frame, Olivetti says, there are potentially some bottlenecks in the supply chain, but no serious obstacles to meeting the rising demand. Still, she said that “it’s important for stakeholders to be aware of the bottlenecks,” as unanticipated supply disruptions could put some companies out of business. Companies need to think about alternative sources, and “know where and when to panic.”

Ms Olivetti said that nd understanding which materials are most subject to disruption could help guide research directions, in deciding “where do we put our development efforts. It does make sense to think of cathodes that use less cobalt.”

Source : Gears Of Biz/voda
DeZwarteRidder
0
quote:

easy56 schreef op 19 oktober 2017 08:34:

investingnews.com/daily/resource-inve...
Caspar Rawles: Why Nothing Can Stop the Cobalt Story
At this year’s Cathodes conference, the Investing News Network caught up with Caspar Rawles, analyst at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, to talk about the cobalt market and what’s ahead for the rest of 2017.

The rally in the cobalt market seems to be unstoppable at this point, as the metal is a key element in the lithium-ion batteries used to power electric vehicles. As electric car sales surge in the coming years, demand for cobalt is also expected to increase significantly.

“I don’t think there are any factors that could derail the cobalt story at this point,” said Rawles. He also explained why he still believes the Democratic Republic of Congo is critical for supply and touched on the need for other countries to bring production into the market.

Speaking about lithium-ion batteries, Rawles said he doesn’t expect any big shift in technology up to mid-2020 that could replace cobalt, although a change in the proportion used in batteries is still in the cards.

That said, he noted that even if less cobalt is used in batteries, “the increase in the volume of sales is going to significantly outweigh that, so the market will still grow.”

Watch the video above to hear more about Rawles’ thoughts on the cobalt sector and what to expect in the near future. The transcript for this interview will be added shortly.

Don’t forget to follow us @INN_Resource for real-time news updates!
DeZwarteRidder
0
quote:

DeZwarteRidder schreef op 15 oktober 2017 22:02:

Australian Mines Limited (ASX:AUZ) is acquiring full ownership of the Sconi cobalt-nickel-scandium project in Queensland by signing an agreement with JV partner Metallica Minerals (ASX:MLM).
Ik baal als een stekker: ik plaats een kooporder voor AUZ (die niet wordt uitgevoerd) en direct daarna stijgt de koers met ca 100%.....!!!
[verwijderd]
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Doctor Copper and Cobalt
2 hours ago
Focus: COMMODITIES

Frank Holmes Image
Frank Holmes
CEO and CIO, U.S. Global Investors, Inc.
Copper is often seen as an indicator of economic health, historically falling when overall manufacturing and construction is in contraction mode, rising in times of expansion, suggests Frank Holmes, CEO of US Global Investors and editor of Frank Talk.
That appears to be the case today. Currently trading above $3 a pound, “Doctor Copper” is up close to 24 percent year-to-date and far outperforming its five-year average from 2012 to 2016.

Several factors are driving the price of the red metal right now. Manufacturing activity, as measured by the purchasing manager’s index (PMI), is expanding at a pace we haven’t seen in years in the U.S., eurozone and China. The U.S. expanded for the 100th straight month in September, climbing to a 13-year high of 60.8.

Speculators are also buying in response to word of copper shortages in China, despite September imports of the metal rising to its highest level since March. The world’s second-largest economy took in 1.47 million metric tons of copper ore and concentrates last month, an amount that’s 6 percent higher than the same month in 2016.

Why are we seeing so much copper entering China? One reason could be battery electric vehicles (BEVs), which require three to four times as much copper as traditional fossil fuel-powered vehicles.

China is already the world’s largest and most profitable market for BEVs, and Beijing is now reportedly working on plans to curb and eventually ban the sale of fossil fuel-powered vehicles, according to the Financial Times.
This would place the Asian giant in league with a number of other powerful countries similarly crafting bans on internal combustion engines within the next 25 years, including Germany, France, Norway, the United Kingdom and India.

Because of the sheer size of the Chinese market, this move is sure to delight copper bulls and investors in any metal that’s set to benefit from higher BEV production. That includes cobalt, lithium and nickel.

According to Bloomberg New Energy Finance, BEVs will account for 54 percent of all new car sales by 2040. That year, China, Europe and the U.S. are expected to make up 60 percent of the global BEV fleet.

This could have a huge effect on copper prices over the next 10 years and more. With fewer and fewer large deposits being discovered, demand should accelerate from 185,000 metric tons today to an estimated 1.74 million tonnes in 2027, according to the International Copper Association.
These are among the reasons why Arnoud Balhuizen, chief commercial officer of Australian mining giant BHP Billiton (BBL), called copper “the metal of the future” in an interview with Reuters last month.

“2017 is the revolution year [for electric vehicles], and copper is the metal of the future,” Balhuizen said, adding that the market is grossly underestimating the red metal’s potential as BEV adoption surges around the world.

And let’s not forget cobalt. The brittle, silver-gray metal, used to extend the life expectancy of rechargeable batteries, is up more than 81 percent so far in 2017 and 109 percent for the 12-month period.

Performance is being driven not only by growing BEV demand but also supply disruptions in the Republic of the Congo, where more than 60 percent of the world’s cobalt is mined.

“It’s a really bright future for cobalt,” Vivienne Lloyd, analyst at Macquarie Research, told the Financial Times. “There doesn’t seem to be enough of it.”

Before now, there was very little mainstream interest in cobalt as an investment, but that’s changing as rapidly as world governments are joining the chorus to move away from fossil fuels.

One sign of that change is the London Metal Exchange’s upcoming cobalt contracts, one for the physical metal and another for the chemical compound cobalt sulphate. This will allow investors to trade the underlying metal and participate in the electric vehicle “revolution,” as Balhuizen calls it.

In the meantime, investors can participate by investing in a producer with exposure to cobalt — among our favorites are Glencore (GLCNF), Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) and Norilsk Nickel (NILSY) — or a natural resources fund such as our U.S. Global Investor's Global Resources Fund (PDPFX).

www.moneyshow.com/articles/tradingide...
Housepartyy
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quote:

DeZwarteRidder schreef op 15 oktober 2017 22:02:

Australian Mines Limited (ASX:AUZ) is acquiring full ownership of the Sconi cobalt-nickel-scandium project in Queensland by signing an agreement with JV partner Metallica Minerals (ASX:MLM).

The Sconi project is rated one of the most advanced projects of its kind in Australia, with mining approvals in place and a bankable feasibility study (BFS) well advanced.

The Sconi Project is similar to Clean TeQ’s (ASX:CLQ) Syerston project in terms of its in-situ resource size & grade, geology, metallurgy and expected metal recoveries.

As at Syerston, scandium production at Sconi is a ‘sweetener’, given that it is produced alongside the cobalt and nickel sulphate products for virtually no additional operating cost.

The consideration for the acquisition is to include $3.5 million in cash and the issue of Australian Mines shares on completion of the BFS and commercial production.

Australian Mines is now positioned to fully own both the Sconi and the Flemington cobalt-nickel-scandium projects.

Having full control of both the projects puts Australian Mines in a good position to continue its already advanced off-take discussions with international battery and vehicle manufacturers.

To shore up the initial interest from end customers, the company has commenced construction of a demonstration-size processing plant to produce samples of cobalt, nickel and scandium products.

Importantly, the company recently raised $3.5 million via a placement at $0.015 per share to assist in the initial cash payment for the Sconi acquisition.

The BFS on Sconi is advancing to schedule and is due for completion by April 2018.

Australian Mines is on track to reach a final investment decision given that it already has a Mining Lease and environmental approvals in place.

Ze gaan hard. van 2 naar 6 cent in 3 dagen

Australian Mines Ltd's (ASX:AUZ) trading activity continues to grow at an exponential rate, with the company potentially trading one billion shares this week.

By midday today, Thursday, the stock is once again the most traded on the ASX by more than double, as 163 million have changed hands for a 21% gain to $0.058.

This week the volume has been Monday (94 million), Tuesday (145 million) and Wednesday (391 million).

In total that’s 793 million shares, with still a session and a half to go in the trading week.

Go back a week and the total traded was 353 million, and the week prior to that was 81 million.
easy56
0
investingnews.com/daily/resource-inve...

Speaking with the Investing News Network at Cathodes 2017, David Weight, president of the Cobalt Institute, shared his thoughts on the cobalt market and the challenges it could face as demand increases.

“The general difficulty for the cobalt market is that cobalt is a by-product of copper and nickel, so it relies heavily on what is happening in those markets,” Weight said.

As demand for lithium-ion batteries continues to increase, supplying enough cobalt for buyers will be a challenge, “but production should be responsibly sourced,” he noted. The cobalt market could also face challenges in terms of regulations, as is currently the case in Europe.

Watch the video above to hear more about Weight’s thoughts on the cobalt sector and what role the Cobalt Institute plays in the market. The transcript for this interview will be added shortly.
DeZwarteRidder
0
’s Werelds grootste maker van lithium-ionbatterijen, een cruciaal onderdeel van elektrische auto’s, is Panasonic, met een marktaandeel van 33 procent. Het Japanse bedrijf steeg dit jaar al 38 procent. Panasonic ziet de vraag naar lithium-ionbatterijen tot 2021 met 17 procent per jaar groeien. De Japanners zijn ook de partner van Tesla in hun megabatterijfabriek in Nevada. Tegen 22 keer de verwachte winst is Panasonic niet goedkoop maar ook niet duur. Twee op de drie analisten die het aandeel opvolgen raden aan te kopen. Andere grote batterijmakers zijn BYD, LG Chem en Samsung.

Bij de makers van materialen om al die batterijen voor de zoemende wagens te produceren, kom je terecht bij Umicore. De Belgische groep is wereldleider in nikkel-mangaan-kobalt-legeringen (NMC), cruciaal voor het productieproces. Dit jaar verstevigde de koers al 39 procent. Umicore lijkt tegen 42 keer de winst over 2017 peperduur. ‘Umicore is een fantastisch bedrijf, en verdient door zijn technologische voorsprong en staat van dienst een premie’, stelt analist Stijn Demeester van ING. ‘Maar beleggers moeten begrijpen dat aan deze waarderingsratio’s al veel van de toekomstige groei in de koers verrekend is. We gaan niet verder dan de rating ‘houden’ voor het aandeel. Als belegger moet je een veiligheidsmarge tegen risico’s inbouwen, en die zien we bij Umicore aan deze prijs niet meer. Beleggers onderschatten de risico’s. Ten eerste zit de concurrentie niet stil. Zowel concurrenten Johnson Matthey als BASF kondigden grote investeringen in batterijmaterialen aan. Ten tweede kijkt Umicore door de sterke groei tegen zware kapitaalinvesteringen aan. Ten derde heeft de opmars van de elektrische auto een keerzijde voor Umicore, want de vraag naar katalysatoren voor dieselmotoren zal verminderen. Nu boekt die afdeling nog stevige winstmarges, maar die riskeren binnen enkele jaren te zakken.’
Lithium-ionbatterijen. © REUTERS Lithium-ionbatterijen. © REUTERS

Johnson Matthey zet bovendien in op een concurrerende technologie: eLNO, wat staat voor ‘verbeterd lithium-ionnikkeloxide’, een methode die efficiënter zou zijn dan de NMC-legeringen van Umicore. Maar daar maakt Demeester zich niet druk over. ‘NMC blijft nog zeker tien jaar de overheersende technologie. Het duurt lang voor een nieuwe techniek wordt ontwikkeld én veilig wordt bevonden om mee rond te rijden.’

Ook Solvay profiteert van de elektrificering van het wagenpark. Solvay levert chemicaliën en de membranen die ervoor zorgen dat de batterijen veilig zijn. ‘Voor Solvay is er een positieve impact, maar die blijft al bij al beperkt’, zegt Demeester. ‘Belangrijker voor Solvay is de productie van composietmaterialen, want hoe minder een auto weegt, hoe langer hij zal kunnen rijden.’

Daarnaast zijn er tal van spelers die essentieel zijn in batterijtechnologie. Het Japanse Zeon beheerst de helft van de markt in materiaal om te voorkomen dat elektrodes opzwellen. Separatoren komen vaak van Toray Industries. Mitsubishi Chemical levert elektrolieten. Hitashi Chemical verkoopt de helft van de wereldwijde anodematerialen die nodig zijn om snel op te laden.

Van de makers van materialen is het een kleine omweg naar de leveranciers van de grondstoffen. In een herlaadbatterij zit vooral lithium, nikkel, mangaan en kobalt. Mijnbouwers zullen moeten investeren om de vraag te kunnen volgen. ‘Dat zal niet makkelijk zijn’, waarschuwt hoofdstrateeg Frank Vranken van Puilaetco Dewaay. ‘Alleen al Volkswagen zal zo’n 80.000 à 130.000 ton kobalt per jaar nodig hebben, terwijl het wereldwijde aanbod nu 100.000 ton bedraagt.’

Zestig procent van het kobalt wordt opgedolven in Congo, niet bepaald het meest stabiele land ter wereld. De grootste kobaltspelers zijn geïntegreerde mijnreuzen zoals Glencore en Vale. Veel grondstofdelvers zijn niet genoteerd, zoals het Congolese Gecamines. Het Japanse Sumitomo Metals Mining, de hofleverancier van Panasonic/Tesla, heeft als voordeel dat het naast kobalt ook nikkel produceert.
Snirp
0
Eerder in dit topic is gesproken over Katanga Mining als één van de mogelijkheden om te investeren in kobalt. Ik neem aan dat enkele van jullie net als ik wat aandelen hebben aangekocht. Afgelopen vrijdag is de koers enorm gestegen, evenals vandaag. Nu zijn er geruchten dat Glencore(belang van ruim 86%) een buy-out wilt uitvoeren. Verder kan ik geen andere aanleiding vinden die deze stijging verklaart.

Is er iemand van jullie die een licht kan werpen op deze enorme koersstijging?
DeZwarteRidder
0
quote:

Snirp schreef op 23 oktober 2017 17:08:

Eerder in dit topic is gesproken over Katanga Mining als één van de mogelijkheden om te investeren in kobalt. Ik neem aan dat enkele van jullie net als ik wat aandelen hebben aangekocht. Afgelopen vrijdag is de koers enorm gestegen, evenals vandaag. Nu zijn er geruchten dat Glencore(belang van ruim 86%) een buy-out wilt uitvoeren. Verder kan ik geen andere aanleiding vinden die deze stijging verklaart.

Is er iemand van jullie die een licht kan werpen op deze enorme koersstijging?
Nee.
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